The laptop’s visual identity is unmistakably Ferrari. The exterior is finished in a deep metallic Rosso Magma red, a color borrowed from the Ferrari Daytona SP3 paint palette and applied to a CNC-milled aluminum chassis with a zirconium bead-blasted finish . The palm rest and haptic touchpad are made of full glass, and the keyboard features per-key RGB backlighting that can be customized or left in Ferrari red
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Its most talked-about design element is the underside, which marries real carbon fiber with a Corning Gorilla Glass window . This transparent panel reveals the laptop’s cooling system and internal components, mimicking the exposed engine bay of a Ferrari supercar
. The device also reportedly ships with a branded leather carrying sleeve crafted by Poltrona Frau, the same Italian leathermaker that supplies materials for Ferrari interiors
.
Beneath the dramatic styling, the specifications are fixed. There is only one configuration available.
The machine also includes HP Wolf Security for Business at the hardware level and Wi-Fi 7 connectivity .
At $5,599, this Ferrari-branded notebook costs roughly $2,400 more than a similarly configured 14-inch MacBook Pro with Apple’s M5 chip, which retails for around $3,149 . The premium is essentially for the Ferrari design, the limited-edition exclusivity, the branded materials, and the automotive-inspired packaging that lifts the laptop upward when you open the box
.
That price has drawn attention for another reason: the laptop lacks a discrete GPU. At this price point, many users expect a dedicated graphics card for serious gaming or creative work, but the Scuderia Ferrari AI PC relies entirely on Intel’s integrated Arc B390 graphics . While the integrated GPU is capable for AI-accelerated productivity and content creation, reviewers have noted that its absence is unusual for a laptop priced like a high-end workstation
.
Sales begin on June 12, 2026, exclusively through HP.com and Ferrari.com . The machine will be available in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain, and Switzerland
. In Japan, an additional batch of 200 units with a Japanese keyboard will ship in early July for ¥990,000
.
The tiny production run of 4,999 units, each individually numbered, positions this laptop as a collector’s item as much as a daily driver . HP and Ferrari are clearly betting that exclusivity and design provenance will matter more to buyers than a raw performance-to-price ratio.
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